Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 3 Jul 1963, p. 7

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Wednesday. July 3. 1963 THE McHENRY PLAINDEALEB CLASSIFIEDS Waited 2 BEDROOM HOUSE -- Living room and big kitchen. Garage. Fruit trees to yard. 385- 4772. 7.3.63 LARGE 3 BEDROOM home, close in. will trade for small 2 bedroom home. Must be in or close to McHenry. Call 385- 5243. 7-3-25-63 INCOME PROPERTY -- 1T12 W. Grandview Drive, Sunnyside Estates. 2 four room apartments. 140x112 lot, 2 car garage. Call 385-1256. 7-3-25-63-TF 2 BEDROOM brick home, 2 car garage all brick, partly furnished basement with heat. Reasonable. Call 385-0074. 7-3-25-63-TF WATERFRONT LOT on Fox River in Orchard Heights. 60x 130, price $3,000. Call 385- 1908. 7-3-25-63-TF HUNTERVILLE PARK -- 3 bedroom, 1% baths, family room, utility room, forced air heat, garage. Walk to town. River rights. $13,950 or best offer. Will consider low down payment. 385-1T42. 7-3-25-63-TF 2 LOTS -- Located on Victoria and John Streets, Country Club Subdivision. Call 385- 0074. 7-3-25-63-TF LARGE BUSINESS lot on highway 120. West of McHenry 130 ft. on highway. 150 ft. deep. For information call 385-0852. 7-3-25-63-TF 7 ROOM, 4 bedroom all year around frame house on Fox River, 73* frontage by 310.' Seawall, beautifully landscaped, 2 car garage, 2 baths, W/W carpeting, fully furnished, large boat pier, gas heat. Must see to appreciate. Will take summer home in trade-in. McHenry area. For appointment call 385-2456. 6-27 thru 7-25-63 McHENRY SHORES -- For sale or rent, 3 bedroom ranch, stove, refrigerator, attached garage. Phone 312 GRovehill 6-7537 or write Mrs. Swierski, 9708 S. Throop, Chicago, 111. •6-27-7-3-63 PACKAGE BARGAIN -- 2 bedroom home, basement, 2 car garage, etc. 2 extra improved lots valued at $4,000 -- House $11,500 -- Package price $14,500. 5417 Thelen Drive, Pistakee Highlands. Call, HYatt 7-3489. 6-27-7-3-63 REDUCED $1,000 for quick sale -- 9 year old, 2 bedroom ranch. Large landscaped Jot, screened patio, gas heat, tiled bath. Cooney Heights Subdivision. Phone 385-6320. *6-27-7-3-6$ OWNER -- 3 Bedrooms, 1% baths, 2 car garage, gas h?at, low taxes. Many extras. Shown by appointment 385-7388. Price $20,000. 6-27 thru 7-18-63 ASK for what you want with bigger than outdoor advertising. Your ad on this page is read by 20,000. ••• WHAT! TOO PROUD TO LIVE IN SUNNYSIDE BEACH -- Then don't read this ad. Small 2 Br. summer cottage on river at only $10,500. > For app't. call after 5:30 pjn. •HENRY NELL REAL ESTATE 1601 Sunnyside Beach Drive Phone 385-1216 7-3-11-63 McCullom Lake Ideal for retirement. 2 bedrooms, living room, kitchen, bath, screened patio, oil two 50' lots. Trees A shrubbery. Refrigerator and electric stove. The price is right. Open House Sat. St Sun. 4701 W. Parkview -- Gate 2 Village of McCullom Lake Phone: COlumbus 1-2139 7-3-63 PISTAKEE LAKE Must Sell -- Leaving Town BEST OFFER 6% room year around cape cod house on 2 lots. 3 bedrooms, auto, oil heat, fireplace, large living room, newly carpeted, full basement, rumpus room with bar. 150 ft to community pier. Beautifully landscaped. , CALL Code 312, JUstice 7-5414 or JTUstice 7-0220 or JU 7-5113 EXPERIENCED BABY sitter will baby sit day or evening. Linda Kennebeck* 385-1913. *7-3-63 F«u»44 I LOST -- Girl's eyeglasses be tween Nye Drugs and Lincoln Rd. on June 27th, late afternoon. 385-5637. *7*9-03 BE WISE --. USE THE CLASSIFIEDS Jra&d Ss?5» BROASTED CHICKEN? Coming soon! 7-3-63 NOTICE Garbage will be picked AipJJjursday, July 4th, in Lakeland Park Area. McHenry Disposal Co. 7-3-63 McHenry Library Corner Main and Green Sts. ft HOTTR3 Friday Evening*;: 7 to 9 p.m. Daily, Including Saturday: 2 to S p.m. NOW INTRODUCING THE OPENING OF THE HALF WAY RANCH. INC. On Bull Valley Road in Bull Valley WATCH FOR SIGN We Proudly Introduce Our Fine Line of Riding Horses Quarter Horses and Grade, Horses Riding Lessons Private Lessons Semi Private Lessons Group - Class Lessons Age 5 to ? All Classes with Instruction SPECIAL RATES -- Card of 10 Rides $20.00 Each Ride $2.50 per hour Outdoor Arena Horses Boarded - Bought - Sold - Trained Party -- Hayrack Ride CALL: WOODSTOCK, ILL., PHONE 815-338-2940 HALF WAY RANCH, INC. Raymond & Dorothy Baty, Owners Router 3 Bull Valley Road Woodstock, 111. I 6-20-63 thru 7-11-63 IN McHENRY 2 Story 4 ft1, home in beautiful condition. Full basement and 2 car garage on large wooded lot with fruit trees. Close to churches and shopping. Shown by appointment only. Priced at only $23,500. IN McHENRY 2 Br. home with 2 car garage, on large wooded lot. Ideal location to schools, churches and shopping. Priced at only $17,500 or best offer. NEAR McHENRY Charming, Deluxe 2 Br. brick ranch style with family rooifi, patio, full basement and 2 car garage. 1% baths, built-in range and oven. Very modern. On large lot. Only 2 blocks to St. Patrick's and St. Mary's Church. Priced at only $29,500. Also many other listings to choose from including homes on the river. THE KENT CORPORATION McHenry's Oldest Real Estate Office Since 1923 PHONE 385-3800 1311 N. Riverside Drive McHenry, Illinois 7-3-63 COMFORT, CONVENIENCES WATERFRONT HOMES ATTRACTIVE 3 BR. RAMBLING RANCH HOME on large 114' waterfront lot. 27' L.R. with fireplace, 12x20' panelled family room with 12x14' screened-in patio, attached 2 car garage. Includes washer, dryer, range, kitchen set, 2 lounges and all draperies, curtains, etc. Owner being transferred out of state must sell. Will take best offer. Seller will pay closing costs. COMFORTABLE ? ROOM CXLDER HOME on * 8#' hfe* front wooded lot. All modern conveniences including living room furniture, wall to wall carpeting, dining room set, 1 bedroom set, range, draperies, etc. $17,000. VERY ATTRACTIVE NEW 3 & 4 BEDROOM HOMES built to order with beach & boat dock rights. 1% and 2 full bathrooms. Built in oven & range. Recreation & family rooms, storms & screens. No money down to qualified buyers. ALSO 2 & 3 BR. HOMES with beach and boat dock rights. All modem conveniences. $100 down, approx. $95 per month, includes prin., int., taxes and ins. SUNNYSIDE REALTY 385-0162 •THE BIRTHDAY RIMCi," By Gabriel Fielding Gabriel Fielding wrote his brilliant new novel-he tells usas a result of his long obsession with the innocent malevolence of the Nordic mind. To recreate the dying Third Reich Internally, in terms of a ramifying business dynasty bent on surviving and exploiting the second world war; this is an aEtonishing feat of empathy for an English novelist. But every character, every social nuance, every detail of "that proud, cold, cruel, grotesque world carries total conviction. The aggressive puritanism and seedy prostitutes, the Budden borooks like family machinations, the aristocratic snobbery that first ignored Hitler and finally exploded in 1944> putsch-Mr. Fielding captures them all. There are the expected set-pieces: SS torture, concentration- camp horrors, capsule suicides, and of course Responsible for my debts only. Signed, Jennie W. Pauly, 5307 N. Highland Dr., McHenry, 111. *6-20-27-7-3-63 NOTICE Lilymoor Residents This is to notify all residents now using catch basin located on Section 'B' Lilymoor subdivision, as septic system. On July 23, 1963 all line9 and tank will be closed permanently. Owner of Section 'B' Maurice A. Haines *6-20 thru 7-3-63 pathological anti-Semitism. Bin it is in less obtrusive ways--an infinity of telling details, a firmly articulated moral structure that Mr. Fielding gives this magnificent novel its cohesion, depth and power. The story is set in Germany from 1939 to 1945, and focused on a family of part-Jewish, Catholic steel magnates. The particularity of atmosphere is effortlessly captured, from the first, in conversation, wit, wealth, ease, charm, affection, accepted infidelities and treacheries, the Schloss for hunting, the dinner-table around which power operates as surely as in the mills. The horrow that has to come seeps in slowly, running alongside ordinary life at first and almost unrecognized, only gradually swelling into a tide that cannot lie ignored. Mr. Fielding's abounding nervous vitality and his elegant mind prevent his even condescending to exploit or underline his theme, but the details of pride and doom and dissolution are so intimate a great many people will probably turn again to the title-page, to see who was capable of such a fine translation. "The Greyling" By Daphne Kooke "The Greyling" is a novel of South Africa today. Prime Minister Verwoerd is shot on the first page but the theme is not political; the effect on personal relationships of the rigid social barriers and deepingrained prejudices emerge from these pages with a force that is the more striking for its restraint. The narrator s husband, Ray Van Doom, is serving a term of imprisonment for the murder of a discarded mistress who threatened his marriage. The novel deals with another type of murder, but it is the result of a quite different set of causes. Bokkie Sipho, "the Greyling," is a half native, half Afrikaner servant. She is seduced by a weak young Afrikaner, Maarten, and has a child by him. Her tragic life ends in her murder. Maartea is loathed by the coloured, and despised by the whites, who see themselves betrayed by a supporter of apartheid. Without comment, Mrs. Rooke lets the tragic truths of the Greyling's story s^eak for themselves. "The Three Lives of Harriet Hubbard Ayer-" by Margaret Hubbard Ayer and Isabella Taves. It is not enough to say that she was a famous society beauty, a fantastically successful business woman and one of the best-known and best-loved newspaper woman of her day. Her dramatic life was a history of courage, and now her youngest daughter reveals, as only Notice ANNOUNCING GRAND OPENING Pine Tree Tower Live Bait & Tackle Shop Formerly Located at Wolff's Bait Shop Our New Address -- Route 120 & Chapel Hill Road 4TH OF JULY SPECIALS Night Crawlers 20c Doz. Red Worms 3 Doz. 25c Minnows 6 Doz. $1.00 Soft Shell Crabs 60c Doz. Hunting & Fishing Licenses Enjoy our air conditioned snack shop while we serve you. FISHERMAN'S BREAKFAST. --, 0, A.M. • .V. < , Treats top the ehijdre^, GEORGE & MA&INE KILGdKE, fcropl* 7-3-63 7-3-63 BAIRD & WARNER, INC. Established 1855 OAKHURST -- 2 Br., part basement home with pier and river rights. $10,500 for quick sale. LAKELAND PARK -- 3 Br. brick ranch with built-in gas kitchen on 100x120' lot. $14,000. SHALIMAR -- Expandable 2 story home on 50x300' lot with the finest evergreens you ever saw. Full basement. River rights. $16,000. McHENRY SHORES -- Exceptionally nice 3 Br. ranch with cathederal living room and stone fireplace. Full basement. Attached garage. Boat & trailer included for $25,500. MR. HEINEN -- 385-2527 7-3-63 We Specialize In WATER FRONT PROPERTY A. H. Gallagher and Associates VIRGINIA GALLAGHER - 385-1089 EDWARD CARLSON - 385-0818 "•25-S3-TPF VOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND THE Grand Opening Of FREDDY'S PLACE Located at Mylith Park Rd. & Lamphere Rd. at Slocum Lake Island Lake, Illinois July 6th & 7th, 1963 FREE BUFFET ORCHESTRA FRED and ALICE LEUTH 7-3-63 G. & D. SNACK SHOP 1009 N. Front Street McHenry, Illinois Opening June 29th HOURS: 6 a.m. till ??? Breakfast • Lunches • Snacks • Twin Burgers with Fries • Sauer Kraut Hot Dog • Italian Beef & Sausage ' *6-27-7-3-63 she,dm, the hunedible stoiy if h#r mother's life. She was the "ugly duckling of a wealthy Chicago family, born in a house where t he Blackstone hotel now stands... made a brilliant marriage... suffered the horrors of the Chicago fire. She scandalized the "Four Hundred" by going to work in New York...then made a tenstrike by buying, in Paris, the formula for a beauty cream and manufacturing and marketing it for American Women. She was the target of nation- | al scandal and notoriety.. .was the object of gossip when people asked: Why did her children desert her? Why did her husband testify against her? Why did she disappeart She was unjustly committed to an insane asylum.. .was hounded by a king's physician, a famous novelist and a Wall Street financier.. .the means they used to destroy this brilliant, successful woman were more lurid, more fantastic than any fiction would dare to tell. She was declared sane after one of the most sensational trials in New York history... recovered financial security by lecturing on "My Fourteen Months in a Madhouse", .brave outspoken and unconventional, she made a new career as columnist and feature writer for "The New York World." Here is a life story more gripping than fiction. But the fascination of it lies in its truth. "GAMAILIS/' and other tales from Stalin's Russia, Vladimir, Andreyev. The past two centuries have seen a tormented obsession With evil in Russian literature, which has manifested itself in two forms; that of physical agony, as in the melodramatic works of Dostoyevsky and Koestler, and that of irony, as seen in the "autobiographical" writings of Pasternak, where matter-of-fact narrative is juxtaposed with the hard fact of horror. Andreyev writes in the latter mode; his stories-all based on his firsthand experience as a Chekist officer, are superficially little more than diary entries of an Orwellian officer of the state. Yet, as his narrative trots forward, in extraordinarily carefree fashion, the reader will slowly become aware of the full extent of horror pdrtrayed: That a confrontation with evil in its most total extent is being portrayed by a compassionate Russian, whose own vision encompasses a whole age of torment and fatalism coupled with morally hollow, blueprint attempts at Utopia. These six stories are each a fact of a single picture; each holds a characteristically Russian maxim. But the reader will not anywhere find the author stating a personal feeling until the final line of the final page of the final story, when a pseudocryptical observation brings a close to sombre and chilling as the vast Russian taiga in which the stories are set. THIRTY YEARS OF ARMY LIFE ON THE BORDER," By Randolph B. Marcy. Randolph Barnes Marcy was graduated from West Point in 1832, and for the next three decades he part icipated in some of the most important and exciting ventures in the opening of the West. This first-person account not only describes such assignments as blazing a trail along the Canadian river through Oklahoma and the Texas Panhandle, , surveying lands In north and \^e.«(l 't,ex^s for Indian reservations, arid leading a grim winter expedition across the Rocky Mountains, it also gives a remarkably vivid account of. Army life on the Great Plains, of the various tribes of Plains Indians, and of wild game in the area and how to hunt it. "Altogether Marcy had a most colorful, useful and interesting life," writes Edward S. Wallace in his introduction," and was an unusually attractive and able man. This book is a fair cross section of his activities and of life on the old frontier, told with authenticity and humor." "COW-BOYS AND COLONELS," Edmond Mandat-Grancey. Dissatisfaction with both the government and economy of his native France led Galiot Francis Edmond, Baron de Mandat-Grancey late in the 1870's to invest in the Dakota mining and ranching boom, which was then at its peak. His growing curiosity about the region led him further in 1883 to pack and inordinate amount of hunting gear, saddles, cameras, etc., and journey to America to see the wild West for' himself. The Baron was already a frequent contributor to French newspapers and journals, and through his wellwritten "Cow-boys and Colonels" - a carefully observed account of his month's sojourn in the Black Hills-the reader gets , an excellent and varied view of the whole region. His descriptions of a Fourth of July celebration in Deadwood, of tobacco- chewing hotel loungers, of vigilantes who hang the wrong fellow, of local speech, costumes and customs of the mines and ranches are eloquent of the era. UNDER 21 A column far iaan-agars Br Dan Halligan UK A i { READERS: Larry Willis of 6116 West 19th street Cicero «>4i, i.l„ wrote to me recently in care of the Hickman County Times of Centervllle, Tenn., and despite being overly critical, raised some good points that may be part of your own philosophy. Read what Larry wrote. DEAR DAN: I don't think you will like this but read it anyway, you might find out something abmtf yourself: I think your column stinks because you think you know everything. You have more guts than I do to run your picture in the paper alongside the column. You're the kind of guy who doesn't like to have anyofie on his back but likes to ride kids' backs. You talk like you were never young before. Did you practice what you preach when you were young? If you have any kids, I pity them. My wife and I got married five weeks ago. I am 20 and she is 15. We love each other and get along fine. That's something you never ask the kids -- if they love each other. You just tell them they're crazy. You must be talking from experience. Right? ' • My wife and I have continued to go to church since we've been married and away from our parents. We both believe if the younger generation would trust in God (as we do) instead of writing to and listening to human dictators, thejf would not have the sex problems they do. How does it feel to have someone tell you what they think? -- L. W. DEAR L. W. (and Readers): Writing this column as 1 do and have done for an American and Canadian audience for the past five years, I hear from a Larry Willis seven days a week. Criticism or ridicule has' to be expected and Is the least of my worries. What does worry me in the attitude of so many '5'nder 21" reader* --- not only toward me but toward parents. Adults usually know more about life and its many problems merely from having lived. At 40 you don't have to be an "expert" to know liquor is poison for teeit-agers. Yon know from having seen the lives it's ruined In the past. If parents are as bad as So many of you claim, how come they continue to feed, clothe and shelter you? You eoold be dumped In a home and forgotten. The basic mistake so maoy teen-agers make today Is giving friends of their own ages more credit than they give parents. If a best friend can waltz in the house at 2 a.m. without a word being said, yon may resent year parents because you don't have this same "privilege.** Your feathers get ruffled and your parents are "unfair." Kids, all adults made mistakes in their teen years, myself included, and when we say "this is wrong," we're not being spoil sports but trying to keep you from making the same mistakes. Because we're human, we continue to make mis* takes as adults but we keep trying to help you. If Larry's marriage succeeds with his child bride, It will be the milestone of his life. For my part, law or no law, as a justice of the peace clergyman and knowing a tragic mistafa was being made, I would have absolutely refused to marry a 15-year-old girl to a boy of 20. DEAR DAN: I'm trying to get a job this summer before going away to college but I haven't had much luck. What about these jobs you see advertised iri the paper? You know, sell "products" door to door and make $200 a week and mope. Are they on the level? -- Mitch. DEAR MITCH: I Imagine the basic Idea Is on the level or your newspaper wouldn't run such an ad but whether or not you make $200 a week er more Is another thing, lobs with that lditd of an Income never need to be publicized, I think. I was a sophomore in high school and I tried peddling magazines door to door with a professional crew. This was strictly commission work and my first and only day on the Job I batted 1.000 -- no sales and no commission. Yon can eheck wit. the Job If you wish but before you put up a "performance bond," If one Is required, make sure yon read the fine print. DEAR DAN: I'm in love tirith the most wonderful guy in the world but the trouble Is he's married. He doesn't love his wife and she doesn't love him and the only reason they don't get a divorce is because he can't afford it right now. My parents think he's wonderful and don't mind me dating hirtt but people are beginning to talk. Under the circumstances, as long as I have my parents' approval, isn't the dating all right? He's 22 and I'll be 17 in August. -- Crazy Over Him DEAR CRAZY: We've got a somewhat similar problem -- I'm in love with a married woman. The major difference is that I happen to be married to this gal. Is "Crazy" your family name? It mast be because your parents certainly qualify if they "approve" of you dating this romeo. Why doa't you ask his wife If she approves tpo? DEAR DAN: How old was your daughter when she got married? -- Gay. DEAR GAY: My daughter will be 20 In November and up until yesterday when we received her latest letter, she was still single. DEAR DANt Is it possible for a guy who won't be 18 until next month to be in love with a woman IS years older? I work in a service station and everytime this woman drives in for gas, I just about do handsprings. She never says much but she keeps giving me the eye -- if you know what I mean. -- Station Jockey. • DEAR JOCKEY: Let's hope your only Interest Is In the car and not in the driver. I'm sure If she didn't have the ear and you hilt her in the super-market, you wouldn't be flipping at all. Chalk this up as a summer disease of wiy g^rt gr other. DEAR DAN: My only son is running around with several older boys whose only interest seems to be in getting into trouble. None of them work but they always seem to have plenty of spending money. I don't have a husband anymore and J. J. is more than I can handle. I've asked him to talk to our minister but he refuses. He tells me I'm worrying about nothing and that he can take care of himself. But I'm worried, Dan, and I can't help it. -- Worried Mother. DEAR W.M.: If your son won't go to see your minister, have your clergyman drop In unexpectedly on purpose some evening when 4. i. is home. You have every right to worry If your motherly Intuition tells you your son * is heading for trouble. DEAR DAN: Everytime I get on the dance floor, I stiffen up and make a fool of myself and of the girl I'm dancing with. I've just learned to dance and I tell myself that's the reason. Is it? -- Stiff. DEAR STIFF: Probably. But quit worrying, will you? DEAR DAN: My steady boy friend wants to give me his class ring but his parents won't allow him unless I give him mine. That's the problem. My parents won't let me give up my ring under any circumstances. The thing is that I paid for the ring out of my own money, earned by baby-sitting, and I think if I want to trade it, especially with my steady, I should have that right. Your opinion will be vaJued. -- M. DEAR M.: I think you're more right than wrong but why make an issue of it? Your parents shouldn't feel trading rings Is wrong, if that's their attitude, because they let the doors ripen for this problem when they told you to start going steady. • -- DEAR DAN: My father "has" to read every letter my boy friend writes and I don't know if he doesnt really trust Gary or if he's just nosey. I'm about ready to tell him I've broken up with Gary and then have the mail start going to my girl friend's house. Gary is in the Army about 1,000 miles away and we write three times a week. Nothing much is ever said in the letters but a girl does like a little privacy. Would I be justified in giving* my boy friend a new address? My mother knows about this and approves. -- ST J. DEAR S. J.: As long as your mother Is on your team, you've got a good argument. However, this is something your mother and father should work out with her convincing him he's wrong. If your Dad did find out you were deceiving him and the letters were going to a new address, he might really lower the boom. I think your mother should tell him what Gary writes to you is none of his business end make it stick. (Dan Halligan will answer all questions submitted bv teenagers and children. Address him care of this paper. For personal replies enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope.)

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